DAMD to epigenetic silence.

نویسندگان

  • T Kelly
  • P Jones
چکیده

F or many decades, cancer research focused on genetic changes that led to tumorigenesis. However, it is now established that epigenetics also plays an important role in cancer initiation and development (1, 2). The cancer epigenome is marked by a global decrease in methylation, leading to genomic instability and increased methylation at promoters, which in turn leads to gene silencing (3). The importance of this abnormal DNA methylation in silencing cancer-related genes has recently gained a great deal of attention. Detecting altered methylation in tumors on a genome-wide scale is not always easy, but its importance has led to the development of many assays including restriction enzyme digestion, ligation mediated PCR, bisulfite sequencing technologies such as methylation sensitive PCR, incubation of DNA with methylated DNA binding proteins or antibodies to methylcytosine among others. These approaches have their strengths and weaknesses and in this issue of PNAS, Diede et al. describe an approach employing physical properties of DNA called denaturation analysis of methylation differences (DAMD) (4). The method relies on the fact that methylated CpG dinucleotides have different melting characteristics compared to unmethylated CpG dinucleotides. Although the specific conditions described in the paper limit the analyses to CpG islands (i.e., areas with a high density of CpG dinucleotides), the method can be modified in such a way as to also examine DNA methylation differences in genomic regions that are less CpG rich. The authors use the altered melting behavior of methylated CpG dinucleotides to easily and rapidly screen for CpG-rich regions, which have become abnormally methylated relative to control samples and compare the results to those obtained by other approaches. The direct head-tohead comparison with two existing methods, MeDIP and MBD binding, showed that the DAMD method is more sensitive. Importantly, when the authors used the DAMD method to identify promoters methylated in pediatric medulloblastomas relative to normal cerebellum, they identified that several key developmental pathways had become abnormally methylated and hence silenced. These included the sonic hedgehog, the retinoic acid receptor, the bone morphogenetic protein and notch pathways, which were disabled not only in medulloblastoma cell lines but also in uncultured pediatric medulloblastomas, which are a lethal kind of childhood brain cancer. Proper functioning of these signaling pathways are vitally important for the generation of cerebellar granule cells both in vivo and in vitro. Retinoic acid, BMP, Wnt, Shh, and Notch signaling, along with fibroblast growth factor, specify and mediate the proliferation of granule cell precursor cells and their subsequent differentiation into mature cerebellar granule cell neurons (5, 6). The findings of Diede et al. are particularly timely when coupled with other recent studies which have shown the inappropriate silencing of differentiation related genes in adult tumors (7–9). Genomewide epigenomic analyses have shown that these kinds of genes have a particular type of chromatin structure in embryonic stem cells, which precludes their expression until the genes are called upon during later stages of development (10, 11). The adoption of the so-called “bivalent chromatin” domains in embryonic stem cells appears to keep these key regulators in a poised state so that they can be rapidly activated or alternatively kept silent at later stages of development. These bivalent regulatory genes have both the histonemark of the polycomb repressive complex (H3-K27me3) and an active histonemark, H3-K4me3 (Fig. 1). As cells commit to one lineage or another, the bivalent chromatin structure is resolved into either an active configuration, maintaining the H3K4me3 mark, or a repressed state maintaining the polycomb complex, depending upon whether expression of the marked gene is necessary for lineage progression. DNAmethylation is not normally used in embryonic stem cells to suppress the activities of genes which have CpG islands within their promoters because the 5-methylcytosine mark is far less plastic than histone modifications which silence genes. Numerous studies have shown that genes, which are subject to this bivalency, are far more likely to undergo inappropriate gene silencing by DNA methylation during the formation of cancer (8, 9, 12, 13). The reason for this propensity to undergo de novo DNA methylation is not understood but clearly the DNA methylation mark is more robust and stable than modifications of histones. Thus once genes have become silenced by DNA methylation, a cell’s differentiation possibilities are restricted. Importantly, the de novo DNAmethylation mechanism does not only silence active genes but is also commonly observed in genes that have been kept silencedby the polycomb complex in a process that we have called “epigenetic switching” (14), reducing their regulatory plasticity. At first sight, it might seem that this epigenetic switch would be of limited relevance to cancer because there is no corresponding change in gene expression. However, acquisition of methylation in a Fig. 1. In embryonic stem cells, promoters of developmentally important genes are “bivalent”—having both polycomb repressive complex (PRC) and the active (H3K4me3) histone modification. In response to specific signaling molecules, ES cells become committed to Granule Cell Precursors, losing this bivalency: active promoters lose PRC binding and retain H3K4me3 whereas repressed promoters lose H3K4me3 and retain PRC binding. Many of these polycomb target genes in ES cells become abnormally methylated in cancer, potentially resulting from a failure to differentiate properly. Open circles indicate unmethylated CpG sites, dark circles indicate methylated CpG sites. Arrows indicate transcription start sites. K4 indicates H3K4me3 and PRC indicates polycomb repressive complex.

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

منابع مشابه

Assessment of SCoT and DAMD molecular markers in genetic diversity and species delimitation of three moss species grown in Iran

This study was conducted to assess the efficacy of SCoT and DAMD molecular markers in genetic diversity  of three moss species and compare them with ISSR marker. Another objective was to evaluate the suitability of these DNA markers in species identification (delimitation) in three moss species, including Neckera complanata, Homalothecium sericeum and Neckera cris...

متن کامل

DNA methylation of developmental genes in pediatric medulloblastomas identified by denaturation analysis of methylation differences.

DNA methylation might have a significant role in preventing normal differentiation in pediatric cancers. We used a genomewide method for detecting regions of CpG methylation on the basis of the increased melting temperature of methylated DNA, termed denaturation analysis of methylation differences (DAMD). Using the DAMD assay, we find common regions of cancer-specific methylation changes in pri...

متن کامل

Retrovirus Silencing by an Epigenetic TRIM

Embryonic cells silence transcription by retroviruses, but how do they recognize virus DNA? In this issue, Wolf and Goff (2007) report that a TRIM28 corepressor complex binds to the retrovirus primer binding site. Epigenetic silencing of retrovirus transcription is accomplished by "writing" a dimethyl mark on lysine 9 of histone H3 that is read by the heterochromatin protein HP1gamma.

متن کامل

ذخیره در منابع من


  با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید

برای دانلود متن کامل این مقاله و بیش از 32 میلیون مقاله دیگر ابتدا ثبت نام کنید

ثبت نام

اگر عضو سایت هستید لطفا وارد حساب کاربری خود شوید

عنوان ژورنال:
  • Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

دوره 107 1  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2010